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Comment on An Introduction to the Linux Shell by megatotoro https://noctslackvlgarch.wordpress.com/2011/03/31/an-introduction-to-the-linux-shell/comment-page-1/#comment-694
Fri, 01 Apr 2011 03:41:51 +0000http://wp3.lockergnome.com/nocturnalslacker/?p=1828#comment-694Great article! I’ll be visiting again to learn more. Thanks a lot!
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Comment on An Introduction to the Linux Shell by V. T. Eric Layton https://noctslackvlgarch.wordpress.com/2011/03/31/an-introduction-to-the-linux-shell/comment-page-1/#comment-693
Fri, 01 Apr 2011 02:27:46 +0000http://wp3.lockergnome.com/nocturnalslacker/?p=1828#comment-693Nano is a cool editor. I’ve just been using vim for so long now that it’s like an old pair of slippers to me. 😉
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Comment on An Introduction to the Linux Shell by leftystrat https://noctslackvlgarch.wordpress.com/2011/03/31/an-introduction-to-the-linux-shell/comment-page-1/#comment-692
Thu, 31 Mar 2011 22:29:40 +0000http://wp3.lockergnome.com/nocturnalslacker/?p=1828#comment-692friends don’t recommend that friends use vim.
I’m certain the commands made sense in some universe or other, but now they’re simply user-hostile.

I love Project Gutenberg. It’s been in my favorites/bookmarks for years. I do still prefer to hold the book in my hand and turn the paper pages, though. A book isn’t just a book to me. It’s an all around experience. I like to look at the cover, the binding, the font, the color of the paper that it’s printed on, and even the smell of the book. All those things make the book a book. Oh, there’s the content, too, I s’pose. 😉

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Comment on Five Things the Internet Brought About That I Can Live Without… by Francis J Golden https://noctslackvlgarch.wordpress.com/2011/03/20/five-things-the-internet-brought-about-that-i-can-live-without/comment-page-1/#comment-680
Thu, 31 Mar 2011 04:58:39 +0000http://wp3.lockergnome.com/nocturnalslacker/?p=1809#comment-680Nice read Eric, I agree with on everything but ebooks.

BTW, speaking about Gutenberg there is a project called the Gutenberg Project that offers thousands of books that are in the public domain for free.
It is of course open source and the files are offered
in all the common file formats so they can be read with most of the e-readers on the market.

I just downloaded a bunch of Mark Twain stuff that can be read in Nook’s PC reader program as well as Nook’s standalone reader device.